Cholesterol movement between human skin fibroblasts and phosphatidylcholine vesicles |
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Authors: | Mark J. Poznansky Sandra Czekanski |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physiology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H7 Canada |
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Abstract: | Cholesterol readily exchanges between human skin fibroblasts and unilamellar phospholipid vesicles. Only a fraction of the exchangeable cholesterol and only 10–15% of the total cellular free cholesterol is available for net movement or depletion to cholesterol-free phosphatidylcholine vesicles. [14C]Cholesterol introduced into the fibroblast plasma membrane by exchange from lipid vesicles does not readily equilibrate with fibroblast cholesterol labelled endogenously from [3H]mevalonic acid. While endogenously-synthesized [3H]cholesterol readily becomes incorporated into a pool of esterified cholesterol, little, if any, of the [14C]cholesterol introduced into the fibroblast plasma membrane by exchange from lipid vesicles becomes available for esterification. We interpret these findings as suggesting that: (1) net cholesterol movement from fibroblasts to an acceptor membrane is limited to a small percentage of the plasma membrane cholesterol, and (2) separate pools of cholesterol exist in human skin fibroblasts, one associated with the plasma membrane and the second associated with intracellular membranes, and equilibration of cholesterol between the two pools is a very limited process. |
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Keywords: | Cholesterol exchange Phosphatidylcholine vesicle Fibroblast Cholesterol synthesis (Human skin) |
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